Could SA's Zulco Rodriguez Become The Country's Top Female Bartender?

Zulcoralis “Zulco” Rodríguez hopes that practice makes perfect as she heads to NYC this weekend to take part in the country’s top bartending competition.

The scene was much like one would imagine for a baby's typical first birthday party.

Streamers, balloons, gift bags and rowdy tots teetered around the festivities, squealing and shouting — all except for the birthday girl, who quietly and calmly observed the raucous party.

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Some parents would have sighed with relief at the thought of a mild-tempered child. But Diana Coral Aleman knew something was off.

Despite her mother's spot-on instincts coming true, that baby has turned into a 28-year-old woman about to board a plane to New York City to compete as the Texas representative in a national bartending competition.

It's but the latest feat in the life of Zulcoralis "Zulco" Rodriguez. She simply refuses to be held back despite her moderate to severe congenital sensorineural hearing loss with which she was diagnosed as a baby.

"I don't let that stop me. I'll do this as long as I can," she told the San Antonio Current last week. "I'm very independent, you don't have to worry about me ... I'm not like, 'I'm deaf, boohoo.'"

Precisely. Get to know Zulco, and you'll quickly realize that her disability is actually just one of many traits that make Rodriguez — whose win at Miss Speed Rack Dallas regional contest in January earned her a ticket for the Big Apple — quite the unique individual. Good luck trying to fit her into one clear-cut category. There's no such box to check off to describe her.

Island Girl

Rodriguez may have made a home for herself in San Antonio, but her story starts in the tropics. The first-born daughter of Angel Luis Rodriguez and Aleman, she grew up in the bustling seaside capital city of San Juan, Puerto Rico. Her mother distinctly recalled little Zulco as a fast-developing little one — she walked and had a set of milky whites at just five months old.

After her initial diagnosis, Rodriguez got cochlear implants. By second grade, she needed a hearing aid in her right ear to manage the condition. By that time, she and sister Dennise played guessing games that helped Rodriguez eventually learn how to read lips.

"You have to make sure you're in front of her, or else she can't," Aleman said in an interview with the Current last week.

By sixth grade, she had hearing aids in both ears. The family couldn't afford to pay on their own, so a family friend and a local politician chipped in to make it happen.

"I had those for six years, but I went back to the outer shell because my hearing loss got more severe," Rodriguez said. "That's why you see a lot of old people with those."

By that time Rodriguez had already found hobbies and extracurricular activities in ballet and the Girl Scouts (she retired from her scout career as a senior member, two years shy of getting her own troop). She was also active, playing soccer, volleyball and track and field in middle school and high school.

"She always excelled at what she tried, I never had to work at teaching her or helping her. She always got it, gracias a Dios," beamed Aleman.

But school wasn't without strife. Kids bullied Rodriguez and teased her about the hearing aids — "I told her to say they were for hearing the stupid things they said," Aleman recalled — and teachers at her Catholic school weren't always keen on Rodriguez's chatty ways.

Childhood friend Fernando Villar said that's just her personality.

"She's very intelligent, you never know what she'll say," Villar told the Current in a phone interview from Orlando. "Even when she does run into trouble, she likes challenges."

That assessment received motherly approval.

"You have to understand her. I get her," Aleman said. "I have two daughters, but she and I have this beautiful relationship that's unlike mother-daughter, but that of friends."

So when Rodriguez decided she wanted to head stateside to pursue a degree in forensic pathology, the family agreed to give San Antonio a shot. South Florida, home to a large Puerto Rican population, would be too similar to home so Texas would definitely be trying something really different, Rodriguez said.

CSI: San Antonio

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Kody Melton

Rodriguez's interest in forensic pathology wasn't completely surprising to her family. As a kid, she watched Discovery Channel and NatGeo with her father and always voiced an interest in death. She clipped articles and stockpiled books on ancient civilizations, mummies and lost cities. But after a few shaky pre-med semesters at St. Mary's University, Rodriguez transferred to San Antonio College, where she hoped to build on her biology credits.

But then she took a different turn — to the service industry.

"I noticed my sister making more than I would. I was working harder; she was working smarter," Rodriguez said.

She landed at La Marginal off Nacogdoches, a popular Puerto Rican hangout where she found herself retooling their simple bar program and eventually increasing profits by 30 percent during her year there.

When it comes to working in the bar industry, Rodriguez doesn't let her hearing loss affect the service she's providing. More often than not, diners and bar-goers aren't even aware of her impediment.

On particularly rowdy evenings, she may have to tap a fellow bartender on the shoulder and ask for help with getting the correct drink order down. Her lip reading allows her to fill in the gaps, as long as orders are pronounced well.

"Mumbling is my biggest enemy," said Rodriguez, a native Spanish speaker. "It's not about knowing the language, it's about people speaking clearly."

After a brief stint at Club Rio, Rodriguez began bartending at Hotel Havana, where a co-worker clued her in on the mortuary science program at San Antonio College, just one of four offered in Texas.

It piqued her interest.

"I was struggling academically for a while. I needed a boost. I could still do something related to people," Rodriguez said.

Rodriguez, voted most eccentric in high school back in Puerto Rico, saw mortuary science as a good opportunity. After all, both embalming and bartending are two distinctly service-oriented crafts.

None of this was shocking to Aleman, who pointed to Rodriguez's passion for taxidermy. Visit Rodriguez's apartment and you'll find things like a stuffed chicken foot and a velvet monkey paw

Her latest addition includes a bejeweled (and admittedly quite stylish) lamb leg necklace. Most of her finds, including a mounted mouse butt, are purchased through Etsy or Ebay.

Villar was also not shocked by her friend's drastic career change.

"That's normal for her. She's been into autopsies and such since I met her," he said.

Rodriguez studied and worked concurrently. She readily impressed her boss as a cocktail server at The Brooklynite.

"Her impairment never stopped her once form taking an order. She's done it for so long she knows the tricks ... she has a drive about her that's rare and beautiful," gushed bar manager Jorel Peña.

That work ethic and determination eventually landed her as a barback and later cocktail producer at Esquire Tavern, where she still holds down the craft well.

At the time, she had no problems continuing to juxtapose both careers.

"Zulco would come in with this big smile on her face and we'd ask what was up and she'd go, 'I embalmed a body today!'" Esquire manager Myles Worrell said.